I agree with what you said, would you be able to clarify this... interested.
I believe one could lose salvation, yet cannot lose personal justification once he is justified by God.
In most of the cases in the Bible, the terms salvation and personal justification are synonymous.
But not in all the cases.
In some cases, the Bible presents salvation as a lifetime process.
Personal justification however, is presented as a certain point in time when one is proclaimed justified by God, like in Abraham's case.
(Now there is a difference between a personal justification and a general justification. I am talking about the personal justification only).
Salvation is a process when God starts drawing a person towards Him.
Infant baptism is one of the means when God is doing that. The grace of God is upon that infant.
That is why Lutherans say, if a baptized infant dies, he/she goes to heaven, because he/she died under God's grace (God's smile).
Now, this infant grows up and receives Christ by an adult and sober faith.
That adult is now justified (like Abraham) and cannot "lose" that justification, since it is the Judge who justified that person.
And once the Judge proclaims the judgement, it stays.
Some might object: "What is that adult rejects Christ after being personally justified?".
It is impossible, since Christ already lives in that person and influences him/her from within.
(Rejecting Christ does not necessarily mean to "disown" him under pressure as Peter did, but to reject him based on disagreeing with his mission, as Judas did).
Let's say the infant grows up and rejects Christ with a sober and adult "faith".
That adult now loses his/her salvation that was imputed during the baptism.
What then, would be criteria for deciding which denom you really belong in. Agreeing with a majority of the doctrine?
Thanks!
This really is a great question.
I would present my personal view.
I take the Bible as a written foundation for Christianity.
It was written in ink on paper, so we could refer to it for an objective guidance.
I believe Christianity consists of the Biblical and Sacramental parts.
Christ works through these.
Traditional churches - EO, RC strayed far away from the Bible. They still believe the "basics" of Christianity, but they believe that their personal teachings are at par or even trump the Bible.
Each also state that they contain the entire truth ... while disagreeing with each other.
Bible-based churches - many of them take the Communion as a purely symbolic representation of Christ body and blood.
I do not think it is Biblical, since Christ presented the Communion as mystery and said "This is my body".
Charismatic churches - these believe in extra-Biblical revelations. If they do, how would one know if what one says is false? Besides, times proved them wrong on many occasions.
The Middle Ground.
Episcopalians, Methodists, Lutherans, Presbyterians, etc.
All these have Liberal and Conserbative sects within them.
Concerning the Lutherans.
I do not agree with the Conservative Lutherans on two points - closed Communion and on a point that
some believe that they are correct on all the doctrinal things.
Closed Communion (the way it is practiced there) is un-scriptural in my opinion.
Some Conservative synods even do not commune with each other.
I agree with them on about all the other things.
I do not agree with the Liberal Lutherans concerning their rather loose attitude towards the Bible.
Yet I agree with them concerning the Open Communion. It is Biblical.
Currently, I am a member of ELCA (open Communion) while being a member of a conservative ELCA local church.
Thanks,
Ed